Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and Nuclear Weapons - Links

Each of these links is related in some way to the bombing of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, or the history of nuclear weapons. There is
something for every taste; choose what interests you. This page was
new July 8, 1995, and it was last updated January 31, 2000.

General

Hiroshima Archive - Selected photos from Tsuchida Hiromi's work
Hiroshima, indexed links to other atomic-bomb
related web sites, course syllabi, and selected print references.
Voice of Hibakusha - Eyewitness accounts, by survivors, of the
bombing of Hiroshima.
A Personal Record of Hiroshima A-Bomb Survival - Memoirs of Mr.
Terao, as posted to a Japanese computer network in 1991, with
responses from readers included.
Hiroshima Panorama Project - For $25, the Hiroshima Panorama
Project will send you 3 striking panoramic photos of the destroyed
city of Hiroshima. Each is 8 feet wide, printed on heavy chart
paper. (I have seen these panoramas, and I am going to make an
exception by personally endorsing this product -- Gene
Dannen)

Film, Video, and CD-ROM

Jayne Loader's Public Shelter - A new CD-ROM from the maker of
the classic film Atomic Cafe. Also a very
interesting web site. Jayne is a personal friend. Buy her
CD-ROM!
The Voyager Company - John Else's documentary film The
Day After Trinity profiled Robert Oppenheimer's role in the
nuclear age. Laser-disk and CD-ROM versions of the film have been
released by the Voyager Company.
Post Modem - Australian film expert Mick Broderick, author of
Hibakusha Cinema, surveys nuclear and apocalyptic
visions in film.
The Atomic Archive - Online companion to a CDROM of the same
title about the atomic age. Includes text, photos, multimedia.
Trinity and Beyond: The Atomic Bomb Movie - Producer Peter Kuran
restored declassified archival films of nuclear testing for this and
related movies. Site includes video clips.

Art

Barefoot Gen - Artist Keiji Nakazawa's classic illustrated story
"Barefoot Gen."
Nagasaki Nightmare - A collection of drawings by atomic bomb
survivors and photographs of the bomb aftermath, to commemorate the
50th anniversary. From an online art gallery dedicated to the art of
activism.
Infinity City - An art installation to commemorate the 50th
anniversary of the first nuclear explosion.

Bibliography

Miscellaneous

Nuclear Treaties - Texts of some important nuclear treaties,
including those on nuclear testing and non-proliferation.
VENONA - Soviet espionage in WWII America, including the
Manhattan Project. Text and images of documents (partially)
deciphered by U.S. codebreakers, and not declassified until 1995.
National Security Agency site.
Plutonium on the Internet - See a nuclear explosion destroy a
house and learn more about the Nuclear Control Institute.
Federation of American Scientists - Founded in 1945 by concerned
Manhattan Project veterans, and still active.
Peacewire - Hiroshima-Nagasaki information, plus resources for
activism, from British Columbia, Canada.
Nuke Pop - Paul Brians, author of Nuclear Holocausts: Atomic War
in Fiction, surveys the reflection of nuclear weapons in
popular culture, from movies to comic books to candy wrappers. Many images.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum - The scientists who
built the atomic bomb were motivated by fear of Hitler's Germany.
You may wish to visit the Holocaust Memorial Museum.
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